4.8 Article

Cataluminescence in Er-Substituted Perovskites

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202101764

Keywords

cataluminescence; Cu nanoparticles; methanol combustion; perovskites; plasmon spectroscopy

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) via the Spark project 'Cataluminescence for efficient energy conversion on rare earth perovskites' [190358]
  2. SNSF [190358, 172662, 182987]
  3. UZH-UFSP program LightChEC

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Thermophotovoltaic devices show potential for energy conversion, but the current efficiency of converting chemical energy to light is low due to heat dissipation. Research demonstrates that by manipulating the surface structure, direct conversion of chemical energy into light is possible.
Thermophotovoltaic devices have promising applications for energy conversion. However, current conversion efficiency of chemical energy to light is very low, limited by the competing process of heat dissipation released as black body radiation. From a fundamental point of view, the direct conversion of chemical energy into light without this detour is possible. This so called cataluminescence from methanol combustion over Er-substituted SrTiO3 with high efficiency is demonstrated. The catalytically active quaternary perovskites Er0.15La0.15Sr0.55Ti0.95Cu0.05O3 - delta exsolute and reabsorb metallic Cu particles onto the surface in reducing and oxidizing conditions, respectively. Thus, it is able to manipulate the surface structure and investigate its influence on the catalytic as well as luminescent properties. The fuel to air ratio around the stoichiometry point changes the conditions from reducing to oxidizing and thereby alters the surface properties. This is evidenced by post mortem X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoemission as well as operando optical spectroscopy. Cataluminescence takes place under oxidizing conditions (lean fuel to air mixture) on the Er-perovskite oxide with a strong selective near infrared emission, while reducing conditions stimulate formation of plasmonic Cu-nanoparticles, which emit black body radiation.

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